Dallas Plans to Remove Robert Irwin's Long-Neglected "Portal Park Piece" From Downtown

PortalPiece.jpg
Flickr user steevithak
By now, it's barely recognizable as a piece of art: an eight-foot-tall ribbon of rusted steel scrawled with obscene graffiti, running through an obscure stretch of grassland on the eastern edge of downtown. It fades into the background now, ignored by commuters and passersby.

That wasn't the original vision when Robert Irwin, a rather famous installation artist, unveiled the piece in 1981 after receiving a commission from the Southland Corporation (e.g. 7-Eleven) with an assist from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Irwin, a former Guggenheim fellow who would soon become the first artist to receive a five-year MacArthur Fellowship, called it "Portal Park Piece (Slice)," and that's what it was meant to be: a portal. An entrance to downtown.

"That no longer exists," Irwin told Unfair Park this morning from Austin, where he's working on a new installation. Now, he says, the portal piece is just a hunk of "leftover steel."

That's why he's OK with the city's plan to remove the sculpture. A landscape architect helping draft the city's vision for downtown's parks contacted him a while back about a vision for a revamped Carpenter Plaza that didn't include the portal piece, and Irwin gave his blessing.

RobertIrwin.jpeg
Pace Gallery
Robert Irwin
"I went to take a look at it to make sure it was obsolete. It hadn't been taken care of, obviously," he says, referring mainly to the graffiti.

But the main issue is that, thanks to the realignment of freeway exits, Carpenter Plaza is no longer a portal, just an obscure patch of grass.

"This one had a kind of pointed reason," he says. that's the only thing that made it make sense. If its gone, then its gone."

"Portal Park Piece" is likely stay put for now, at least until the city secures funding for the new downtown parks. When that will be is anyone's guess, but Irwin's not terribly concerned. He came to the realization long ago that sometimes, his work just wasn't meant to last.

"When you do these things all over like I have go to sites sometimes they get better and they improve and they wear well and sometimes they don't," he says. "The world changes."

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9 comments
shwhitley
shwhitley

I don't know why they couldn't move it somewhere else...it's sort of cool to just trash...

blowmetone
blowmetone

I've seen it for years. This is the first time I've had any idea what the hell it was. I always figured it was some  industrial relic of some sort. 

LDR4
LDR4 like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

Give it to the Nasher to block the deadly rays of light.

joe.tone
joe.tone moderator editor like.author.displayName 1 Like

@LDR4 I believe the phrase is POW.

TheCredibleHulk
TheCredibleHulk topcommenter like.author.displayName 1 Like

Irwin seems like a pretty down-to-earth kinda' fella' - you know, for an artiste.

dallasdrilling.wordpress.com
dallasdrilling.wordpress.com

If the City of Dallas paid as much attention to this park as it does the Clyde Barrow Deck Park, it might be a little more utilized.

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter like.author.displayName 1 Like

@darrd2010 Hey, Suhm just sold gas drilling rights for the Clyde. 


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